Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by an expanded glutamine tract, which confers a novel aggregation-promoting property on the 350-kDa huntingtin protein. Using specific antibodies, we have probed the structure of the polyglutamine segment in mutant huntingtin complexes formed in cell culture from either truncated or full-length protein. Complexes formed by a mutant amino terminal fragment most frequently entail a change in conformation that eliminates reactivity with the polyglutamine-specific mAb 1F8, coincident with production of insoluble aggregate. By contrast, complexes formed by the full-length mutant protein remain soluble and are invariably 1F8-reactive, indicating a soluble polyglutamine conformation. Therefore, aggregates in HD may form by different biochemical mechanisms that invoke different possibilities for the pathogenic process. If pathogenesis is triggered by a truncated fragment, it probably involves the formation of an insoluble aggregate. However, the observation of soluble complexes in which an HD-specific pathogenic conformation of the glutamine tract remains accessible suggests that pathogenesis could also be triggered at the level of full-length huntingtin by abnormal aggregation with normal or abnormal protein partners

Mutant huntingtin forms in vivo complexes with distinct context-dependent conformation of the polyglutamine segment / Persichetti, F; Trettel, Flavia; HUANG C., C; Fraefel, C; TIMMERS H., M; Gusella, J. AND MACDONALD E. M.. - In: NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE. - ISSN 0969-9961. - STAMPA. - 6:(1999), pp. 364-375. [10.1006/nbdi.1999.0260]

Mutant huntingtin forms in vivo complexes with distinct context-dependent conformation of the polyglutamine segment.

TRETTEL, Flavia;
1999

Abstract

Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by an expanded glutamine tract, which confers a novel aggregation-promoting property on the 350-kDa huntingtin protein. Using specific antibodies, we have probed the structure of the polyglutamine segment in mutant huntingtin complexes formed in cell culture from either truncated or full-length protein. Complexes formed by a mutant amino terminal fragment most frequently entail a change in conformation that eliminates reactivity with the polyglutamine-specific mAb 1F8, coincident with production of insoluble aggregate. By contrast, complexes formed by the full-length mutant protein remain soluble and are invariably 1F8-reactive, indicating a soluble polyglutamine conformation. Therefore, aggregates in HD may form by different biochemical mechanisms that invoke different possibilities for the pathogenic process. If pathogenesis is triggered by a truncated fragment, it probably involves the formation of an insoluble aggregate. However, the observation of soluble complexes in which an HD-specific pathogenic conformation of the glutamine tract remains accessible suggests that pathogenesis could also be triggered at the level of full-length huntingtin by abnormal aggregation with normal or abnormal protein partners
1999
Huntington's disease; huntingtin; aggregation; polyglutamine; 1F8 mAb.
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Mutant huntingtin forms in vivo complexes with distinct context-dependent conformation of the polyglutamine segment / Persichetti, F; Trettel, Flavia; HUANG C., C; Fraefel, C; TIMMERS H., M; Gusella, J. AND MACDONALD E. M.. - In: NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE. - ISSN 0969-9961. - STAMPA. - 6:(1999), pp. 364-375. [10.1006/nbdi.1999.0260]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/142043
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